Anna Frank died as a teenager on March 31st 1945, just three weeks before the other prisoners in the internment camp where she was kept were released. She grew up in Germany, but then she was forced to run away and reach Amsterdam due to Nazi persecution. As an adoloscent, she saw herself deprived of any human rights, such as citizenship right (in 1941 her German citizenship was repealed), right to food, freedom, and also the most important one, the right to live. Her candor and enthusiam for life can be traced in the words of her famous Diary, which was written while she was hiding from the Nazi-German police with her family. Reading some passages, characterized by maturity and stirring passion, it could be traced Anna’s fragile transition from childhood to adult life, her willingness to become a journalist, her thoughts and pioneering concern about modern issues, such as female subordination and the need of women’s liberation for future social development.